“…Increasing evidence has established links between phylogeny and the elemental compositions of microbes, plants, and animals, including N and P concentrations and N:P ratios (Bartrons, Sardans, Hoekman, & Penuelas, ; Godwin & Cotner, ; González et al, ; González, Dézerald, Marquet, Romero, & Srivastava, ; Penuelas, Fernández‐Martínez, et al, ; Sardans et al, ). Anthropogenic increases in environmental and organismic N:P ratios in aquatic and terrestrial systems are generally associated with cascades of effects that benefit organisms with lower growth rates and lead to shifts in species community composition and function (Apple, Wink, Wills, & Bishop, ; Arnold, Shreeve, Atkinson, & Clarke, ; Ballantyne, Menge, Ostling, & Hosseini, ; Bishop et al, ; Carrillo, Villar‐Argaiz, & Medina‐Sánchez, ; Cernusak, Winter, & Turner, ; Chen, Yin, O'Connor, Wang, & Zhu, ; Elser, Peace, et al, ; Hall, ; Laliberté et al, ; Sasaki, Yoshhihara, Jamsran, & Ohkuro, ; Schindler et al, ; Shurin, Gruner, & Hillebrand, ; Wardle et al, ; Wassen, Olde Venterink, Lapshina, & Tanneberger, ).…”